STATEN ISLAND, N.Y. -- With the ink barely dry on the summonses issued during the last NYPD ticket blitz, police officials are announcing another traffic enforcement crackdown, this time spread out over three weeks.

According to an announcement issued by the NYPD late Sunday night, the new "citywide traffic safety enforcement operation" will start Monday morning, and continue through Sunday, July 6.

The Police Department says it'll be focusing on speeding, passing through red lights, driving while using a cellphone, driving while texting, making improper turns, disobeying traffic signs and failing to yield to pedestrians.

"The traffic safety operation will focus on the most problematic intersections around the city and take place during all hours of the day," the NYPD's announcement reads.

That weeklong push resulted in 725 tickets on Staten Island -- 466 in the borough's 121st Precinct, and 259 in the 120th.

Readers can find a breakdown of the types of tickets issued here, and an analysis about what those numbers say about Staten Island drivers here.

Police released those numbers on Thursday, as Staten Islanders were reeling from a particularly dangerous week on the borough's roads that left one pedestrian dead and several others and a motorcycle rider hurt.

The NYPD's efforts come alongside Mayor Bill de Blasio's "Vision Zero" initiative, which was launched to reduce traffic and pedestrian deaths in New York City. As part of the initiative, the mayor hopes to add more speed- and red-light ticket cameras and lower the city speed limit from 30 mph to 25 mph, though he'd require the approval of the state legislature in Albany.